Pubdate: Thu, 28 Feb 2002 Source: Inquirer (PA) Copyright: 2002 Philadelphia Newspapers Inc Contact: http://inq.philly.com/content/inquirer/home/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/340 Author: Lenny Savino INFLATED ARRESTS DRAW DISCIPLINE AT DEA WASHINGTON - Administrator Asa Hutchinson of the Drug Enforcement Administration confirmed yesterday that agents in the DEA's San Juan office had claimed credit for hundreds of arrests in which they had played no role, and he called their actions "wrong and irresponsible." He also confirmed that several DEA agents had been disciplined in the miscounting. "There is absolutely no excuse for that kind of reporting," he said of the inflated statistics. Citing privacy concerns, Hutchinson declined to spell out disciplinary action against the agents, except to say that it ranged from a 14-day suspension to a letter of reprimand. The DEA's top official was responding to a new report from the General Accounting Office, auditors for Congress. It confirmed a February 2001 Inquirer Washington Bureau report that the DEA's Caribbean division, based in San Juan, Puerto Rico, had inflated drug seizure and arrest figures to attest to its success. An official informed about the DEA's disciplinary proceedings said that Michael Vigil, head of the DEA's international division, was among those reprimanded. At the time of the miscounts, he headed San Juan's DEA office. Former agents who worked under Vigil, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he had for several years encouraged them to count arrests made solely by Puerto Rican police. The San Juan DEA office's figures also included hundreds of routine street busts for marijuana made by Jamaican police without DEA participation, Jamaican authorities told the Inquirer Washington Bureau. They occurred during a monthlong, DEA-led regional drug interdiction dragnet called "Operation Libertador." Vigil declined to be interviewed for this article. He has previously said that he relied on foreign authorities for the statistics and that their accuracy was not as important as the "spirit of cooperation forged between the countries who participated in the operations." The Inquirer Washington Bureau's investigation focused on "Operation Libertador," whose inflated statistics DEA agents offered at news conferences and on the agency's Web site. DEA's Puerto Rico office, where staffing grew in the era of exaggerated performance reports, oversees the 36-nation Caribbean region. According to GAO auditors, it was DEA policy until October to claim credit for drug arrests made by foreign police within the Caribbean region. The GAO, after reviewing a DEA audit of the San Juan office for 1999, found that of 2,058 claimed arrests, 331 involved either "immigration violations with no connection to drug offenses," or drug arrests that DEA agents did not make. Overall, DEA figures counted more than 2,400 foreign arrests from 1996 to 2000. Until August, DEA performance statistics were inspected only at random, the GAO reported. By order of then-DEA Administrator Donnie Marshall, all arrests are now subject to full inspection. Sen. Jeff Sessions (R., Ala.), who serves on the Senate Judiciary Committee, requested the GAO investigation last year. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk